Critical.
Authoritative.
Strategic.
Subscribe to CIO Magazine »

The cloud-SOA connection

IT groups that understand SOA may be able to take better advantage of the cloud

Cloud computing may have overtaken SOA as the trendy technology term du jour, but the two concepts can be paired to bolster service deployments, industry experts say. With cloud computing, enterprises can access services hosted on third-party servers over the Internet. In SOA, enterprises use integrated application services in a more lightweight fashion than traditional application platforms.

Recently, analyst Anne Thomas Manes of the Burton Group wrote a controversial "obituary" for SOA, panning the acronym, while still endorsing the need for service-oriented architecture. SOA, she said, was survived by "offspring," including cloud computing, BPM, mashups, and SaaS.

Where SOA and the cloud connect"Certainly, the SOA conversation is starting to shift to the cloud," says Steven Martin, senior director for developer platform technology at Microsoft. "The cloud is a logical hosting environment for services," he says. "Service orientation is a way to build applications, whereas 'cloud' refers to the infrastructure as well as the delivery model for that application."

"SOA is an architectural style for building applications, loosely coupled, allowing composition," says Jerry Cuomo, CTO of IBM's WebSphere business. "Can we build a datacenter infrastructure on SOA principles? Yes, and that's the cloud, so it's a service-oriented infrastructure," he adds. "It's taking that architectural principle of SOA and applying it to an infrastructure."

Adopting SOA can prepare an enterprise for cloud computing, says Tim Hall, director of SOA products for Hewlett-Packard's software group, by showing what challenges an organization faces internally in supporting service components -- challenges that using cloud services will exacerbate. The service orientation in SOA and the cloud make for similarities, he says, such as both concepts requiring a governance layer and a strong understanding of processes.

Both the cloud and SOA determine what are some of the major reusable components and what are the right technologies to run large-scale components over open networks, says Rob Helm, director of research at Directions on Microsoft. An organization that has moved toward SOA in a modular fashion is in a better position to move modules to the cloud, he notes.

The cloud serves as a good way to deploy services in an SOA environment, says Sanjiva Weerawarana, CEO of open source SOA software vendor WSO2. He notes that SOA and the cloud support each other, but are not based on the same ideas: "Cloud computing is a deployment architecture, not an architectural approach for how [to] architect your enterprise IT [as SOA is]."

SOA could have a role to play in the integration of cloud applications back into legacy systems, says Lew Tucker, Sun Microsystems' CTO for cloud computing. ( Sun plans to unveil its cloud plans on March 18.)

Will the cloud suffer the same downfall as SOA?Another connection between SOA and the cloud is the enhanced buildup of the terms, Hall says. "People overhype it and then it goes through [a period] of disillusionment," he notes -- something that has already happened to SOA. Afterward, a technology is used in a more pragmatic fashion.

Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.

More about: Burton Group, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, IBM Australia, Microsoft, O2, Sun Microsystems
References show all

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the CIO comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
Related Coverage
Related Whitepapers
Latest Stories
Community Comments
Tags: soa, cloud computing
Latest Blog Posts
Whitepapers
  • Top Ten Considerations when Deploying IT Operations Management in the Cloud
    IT organisations must be able to quickly deliver and securely manage new business and IT services at fraction of the cost. This means that every IT organisation must reconsider how they approach IT operations and business service management. As a result, many IT organisations are looking to the cloud for its promised benefits of reducing total cost of ownership, requiring less technical skill set and very fast time to value.
    Learn more »
  • Oracle Exadata: Extreme Performance Lowest Cost
    As organisations contend with escalating demands for greater quantities of information, more sophisticated data analysis, and a burgeoning user population, Oracle Exadata makes database workloads faster, easier to manage, and less expensive. Oracle Exadata is the world’s first database machine to provide extreme performance for both data warehousing and online transaction processing (OLTP) applications.
    Learn more »
  • Book 3 - The Practical Guide to Managing Risks
    Every organisation has a mission. Most, if not all, organisations use information technology (IT) to process their information in support of their missions and reaching their business goals. Managing risks associated with the information and supporting technologies is a critical factor in successful organisational mission realisation. Read on.
    Learn more »
All whitepapers
rhs_login_lockGet exclusive access to Invitation only events CIO, reports & analysis.
Recent comments

HP and IDG news, product videos and resources